Andrew Yang understands the climate crisis. Here are 5 ways he’ll tackle it as 
president. 
https://therising.co/2019/07/27/andrew-yang-understands-the-climate-crisis-here-are-5-ways-he-will-tackle-it-as-president/
 

 Published 3 hours ago on July 27, 2019 By Steven Li 

 

 

 

 

 As climate change quickly became an important point of discussion for 
politicians, most presidential candidates have kept the pace and announced 
plans to tackle the issue. Jay Inslee is running on a climate platform 
https://therising.co/2019/05/16/jay-inslee-new-9-trillion-climate-reform-plan/, 
what he calls the Evergreen Economy Plan. Elizabeth Warren, Beto O’Rourke, and 
Cory Booker called climate change the number one geopolitical issue 
https://therising.co/2019/06/27/geopolitical-threat-climate-change/ for the 
United States; the former two have extensive plans to combat the issue. But 
don’t forget about Andrew Yang — he gets the climate crisis and he’s a man with 
a plan … a couple of them too.
 Yang recently did a Reddit AMA, and users wanted to know more about his 
climate position. Well, voters asked and he answered:
 
 Andrew Yang voices what he’d do as president to combat the climate crisis. 
Andrew Yang expressed five main ways he would tackle the climate crisis as 
President of the United States:
 1. Dramatically Improve the Appeal of Renewable Energy Yang pledges to make it 
as easy as possible for communities to adopt renewables as a power source. Yang 
(rightfully) points out that the United States makes up only 15% of global 
emissions, meaning that other countries need to get involved in the fight 
against the climate crisis too. Specifically, as it comes to renewables, some 
countries aren’t as enthusiastic. For instance, China recently announced it 
would stop subsidizing 
https://therising.co/2019/05/31/china-shift-to-clean-energy-solar-stocks-plummet/
 onshore renewable energy projects. In turn, Chinese investments in renewables 
have dropped some 39%.
 Though global investments into renewable energy dropped, it’s not all 
downhill. For India, Japan, Spain, and Sweden, investments went up as much as 
200% 
https://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2019/07/driven-by-china-global-investment-in-clean-energy-falls.html.
 As capital costs and political stalling serve as barriers for countries to 
implement solar and wind farms, the appeal of renewable energy, for some reason 
or another, simply isn’t high enough for widespread adoption. Specific to the 
United States, Yang pledges to “Direct the EPA to coordinate with state and 
local governments to measure the impact of different policies on effecting 
positive impacts in the area of renewables adoption.” In other words, he’ll try 
to make it as easy as possible for communities to adopt renewables as a power 
source 
https://therising.co/2019/04/08/if-you-cant-beat-them-invest-in-them-oil-companies-and-investors-look-towards-renewable-energy/.
 2. Rejoin the Paris Accord Yang says he wants to have the United States rejoin 
the Paris Agreement, a highly-popular decision among Americans. Yang says he 
wants to have the United States rejoin the Paris Agreement. And that’s probably 
because he knows that most Americans are on board with it. In 2017, Yale found 
through a national poll 
https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/publications/paris_agreement_by_state/ 
that some 70% of Americans want the United States to remain in the agreement. 
Further, The Atlantic reports that the debate over the Paris Agreement isn’t as 
partisan as most may think. In fact, almost 50% of self-identified Trump 
supporters were on board 
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2017/05/most-americans-support-staying-in-the-paris-agreement/528663/
 with America being a part of the agreement.
 The agreement 
https://unfccc.int/process-and-meetings/the-paris-agreement/what-is-the-paris-agreement
 would entail the United States making commitments to reducing emissions and 
getting involved in capping temperature increases, among other tenets. If Yang 
is elected, he hopes to have America join almost 200 other signatories in the 
fight against the climate crisis, a position antithetical to Trump’s 
https://therising.co/2019/07/10/over-60-percent-of-americans-hate-trump-climate-position-heres-why/.
 3. Implement a Carbon Fee and Dividend President Yang would implement a carbon 
fee and dividend-based policy that would charge companies for emissions. 
Fundamentally, a carbon fee and dividend-based policy would entail charging 
companies for carbon emissions resulting from burning fossil fuels. Citizens’ 
Climate Lobby (CCL), an organization that has been pushing for a carbon fee for 
nearly a decade now, suggests 
https://citizensclimatelobby.org/carbon-fee-and-dividend/:
 “The fee would start out low — $15 per metric ton — and increase by $10 each 
year.”
 Yang has a more ambitious agenda. According to his campaign website, he’d like 
to start the carbon tax at $40 per metric ton 
https://www.yang2020.com/policies/carbon-fee-dividend/ and pit half of the 
earnings towards funding his signature UBI policy, and the other half in 
“enhancing [the] efficiency of fossil fuels or increasing availability of 
renewable resources.”
 To hold other nations accountable, President Yang would “Charge a fee on 
imports from countries that don’t impose a similar carbon fee or some type of 
carbon tax.”
 When it comes to consumer prices, estimates show that for every $10 per metric 
ton, the consumer would pay an extra 11 cents per gallon on gas and 1% for 
products ranging from TVs to airplane tickets, according to CCL. On the other 
hand, though, the fee that companies pay would go right back to the end 
consumer. These consumers will be able to pay for goods in the market, which 
will have effectively increased in cost too.
 According to Forbes, a carbon tax could also create jobs 
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamesconca/2014/10/06/can-a-carbon-tax-create-jobs-jobs-jobs/,
 an idea central to Yang’s campaign.
 4. Plant a lot of Trees Andrew Yang believes that we should “plant hundreds of 
thousands of trees as fast as possible.” Drones could potentially do that. 
Image Source: REUTERS/Feisal Omar Some organizations have long been on board 
with planting a lot of trees. The Nature Conservancy, for example, is on a 
mission to plant 1 billion trees 
https://www.nature.org/en-us/get-involved/how-to-help/plant-a-billion/. One 
Tree Planted, a Vermont-based 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, is solicits 
donations for the purpose of helping plant trees. Yang wants to encourage this 
kind of behavior on a larger scale.
 Planting trees comes with a variety of benefits 
https://www.treepeople.org/tree-benefits, which include but are not limited to 
removing and storing excess carbon dioxide, cleaning the air, preventing water 
pollution, and preventing soil erosion. Andrew urges that we “plant hundreds of 
thousands of trees as fast as possible.” In a technology-enabled society, that 
prospect doesn’t seem impossible anymore. Allegedly, drones can help plant over 
100,000 trees every day 
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2017/06/drones-plant-100000-trees-a-day/. The 
environmental impact would be huge if the Yang administration could make this 
happen.
 5. Look Towards Geoengineering Yang seems to be bullish on the prospect of 
geoengineering, especially as it relates to aerosols. Geoengineering 
https://therising.co/2019/04/26/is-geoengineering-the-last-resort-to-mitigating-climate-change/,
 or intervening in Earth’s inherent climate systems, has been a relatively 
controversial approach to tackling the climate crisis. However, Yang seems to 
be bullish about the prospect. On aerosols, he’s referring to the idea that 
they could reflect sunlight and cool the Earth, NASA finds 
https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/features/Aerosols/page3.php.
 On his campaign website, Yang says 
https://www.yang2020.com/policies/climate-change/ that as president, he will 
form a “new Global Geoengineering Institute and invite international 
participation.”
 Through the institute, he hopes to increase investments into geoengineering 
research, including “cloud-seeding technology to increase the atmosphere’s 
reflectivity.”
 
 Did we miss something about Andrew’s climate platform? Let us know 
[email protected].

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